Job opening: Hearing Office Director
Salary: $143 736 - 191 900 per year
Published at: Oct 30 2024
Employment Type: Full-time
The Office of Medicare Hearings and Appeals (OMHA) administers the third level of appeals nationwide for the Medicare program, ensuring that beneficiaries, providers, and suppliers have access to an independent forum and an opportunity for a hearing. OMHA's mission is to be a responsible forum for fair, credible and timely decision-making through an accomplished, innovative and resilient workforce. Each employee makes a difference by contributing to shaping American health care.
Duties
The Hearing Office Director performs the following duties:
Provide overall vision, leadership, and administrative oversight to the office.
Develops and administers goals and standards to measure the performance of the field office.
Develops management controls to ensure the quality of adjudication and administrative programs in the field office.
Provides advice and assistance to subordinate staff in program and operational areas.
Ensures subordinate staff fully and consistently support and comply with the statues associated with Equal Opportunity Employment.
Presents data and recommendations to a variety of people located within and outside the organization.
Qualifications
Your resume must include detailed information as it relates to the responsibilities and specialized experience for this position. Evidence of copying and pasting directly from the vacancy announcement without clearly documenting supplemental information to describe your experience will result in an ineligible rating. This will prevent you from receiving further consideration.
Please limit your resume to 5 pages. If more than 5 pages are submitted, only the first 5 pages will be reviewed to determine your eligibility/qualifications.
Specialized experience: To qualify for the GS-15 position, the incumbent must have one year of specialized experience equivalent to at least the GS-14 grade level performing the following duties: serving as a senior advisory resource on issues related to office administrative issues; (human resources management; financial management; facilities management, and information systems management); executing a budget according to organizational guidelines; maintaining systems and databases to support a paperless environment; coordinating an office's access to networks, including Internet and Intranet connections; administering administrative and information resources management policy; and providing oversight of departmental and individual performance accountability.
Time-in-grade: Current General Schedule (GS) federal employees, and those that have served in GS positions within the last 52 weeks, must have served 52 weeks at the next lower grade, or a combination of the next lower grade level and an equivalent band in the federal service. Provide a copy of your last or most recent SF-50, "Notification of Personnel Action" to indicate your current federal status. You must also submit additional SF-50(s) to clearly demonstrate one year time-in-grade as required in the announcement. If the most recent SF-50 has an effective date within the past year, it may not clearly demonstrate that you possess one year time-in-grade. In this instance, you must provide an additional SF-50 that clearly demonstrates one year time-in-grade.
Documenting experience: In accordance with Office of Personnel Management policy, federal employees are assumed to have gained experience by performing duties and responsibilities appropriate for their official series and grade level as described in their position description. Experience that would not normally be part of the employee's position is creditable, however, when documented by satisfactory evidence, such as a signed memorandum from the employee's supervisor or an SF-50 or SF-52 documenting an official detail or other official assignment. The documentation must indicate whether the duties were performed full time or, if part time, the "percentage of times" the other duties were performed. It is expected that this documentation is included in the employee's official personnel record. In order to receive credit for experience in your resume that is not within the official series and grade level of your official position, you must provide a copy of the appropriate documentation of such experience as indicated above.
Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through national Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religious; community; student; social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to gain employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience. If such experience is on a part-time basis, you must provide the average number of hours worked per week as well as the beginning and ending dates of the experience so it can be fully credited.
Contacts
- Address Office of Medicare Hearings and Appeals
Presidential Tower
2550 South Clark Street
Arlington, VA 22202
US
- Name: OMHA Human Resources Center
- Email: [email protected]